For nearly two months, up to 60 per cent of current residents of the Greek refugee camps on the mainland have not had access to sufficient food. Following the implementation in October 2021 of a law passed last year, the Greek government stopped providing services to those whose asylum applications have been accepted. One in four residents in these facilities are women and two in five are children.

“The women in Eleonas camp keep telling us that their children are crying at night with hunger. Mothers now don’t have money for baby milk so they mush up biscuits in water instead.” said Emily Wilson of Project Elea.

One chronically ill father of three children from Afghanistan, said “If I don’t eat it’s fine but I can’t leave my babies hungry”.

In addition, approximately 34,000 asylum seekers have gone for two months without cash assistance that had previously enabled them to buy food, clothing and other essential items. The EU-funded cash assistance programme was previously administered by UNHCR but was interrupted after the Greek Government took over its management on 1 October 2021. In response to calls by NGOs to urgently address the situation, the government made public assurances that distributions would resume by the end of October. One month later, the problem remains unresolved and its devastating impact on asylum seekers grows by the day.

“Vulnerable and marginalised people are being pushed over the edge: children have to go to school hungry; sick people can’t get a bus to attend to their medical needs; and families have no resources to prepare for a cold winter,” said Martha Roussou of the International Rescue Committee.  

The halt to cash assistance is stripping asylum seekers’ of their dignity and depriving them of the lifeline many depended upon. Refugees and asylum seekers, who were already economically marginalised, are resorting to begging and other negative coping mechanisms to survive.

“Among those affected are rejected asylum seekers who cannot access accommodation or healthcare and have no right to work. This includes many Afghan and Syrian refugees whose applications were rejected on the basis that Turkey is a safe country, despite the fact Turkey is not accepting any returns from Greece”, said Ana Liz Chiban of Fenix – Humanitarian Legal Aid.

Some asylum seekers who live outside the camps as beneficiaries of the Emergency Support to Integration and Accommodation (ESTIA) program are particularly vulnerable. They have also been affected by the interruption in cash provision but, unlike people in the camps, do not receive prepared food distributions. Without even this alternative, they have been left  completely dependent on local social services and organisations to receive food, where those are available.

“Through both its actions and inaction, the Government of Greece is creating a hunger crisis amongst refugees and asylum seekers in the country. It is unlawful, unnecessary, and totally unacceptable for this to be happening in the EU”, said Anita Bay, Director of Save the Children Europe.

NGOs are calling for urgent action to address the growing crisis, including for the Government of Greece to:


Signatory organisations

  1. International Rescue Committee
  2. Action for Education
  3. Arsis - Association for the Social Support of Youth 
  4. Babel Day Center
  5. Better Days
  6. Changemakers Lab
  7. ECHO100PLUS
  8. Equal Rights Beyond Borders
  9. Europe Must Act
  10. Fenix - Humanitarian Legal Aid
  11. Greek Council for Refugees (GCR)
  12. HIAS Greece
  13. HumanRights360
  14. INTERSOS
  15. INTERSOS Hellas
  16. I HAVE RIGHTS
  17. Jesuit Refugee Service Greece ( JRS Greece )
  18. Lighthouse Relief (LHR)
  19. Mobile Info Team (MIT) 
  20. Refugee Legal Support
  21. Refugees International
  22. Safe Passage International 
  23. Save the Children
  24. Still I Rise 
  25. SolidarityNow
  26. Symbiosis-School of Political Studies in Greece, Council of Europe Network
  27. Terre des hommes Hellas

 

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